Arbroath Wanderers F.C.
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Arbroath Wanderers F.C. was an
association football Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of 11 Football player, players who almost exclusively use their feet to propel a Ball (association football), ball around a rectangular f ...
club from
Arbroath Arbroath () or Aberbrothock ( ) is a former royal burgh and the largest town in the Subdivisions of Scotland, council area of Angus, Scotland, Angus, Scotland, with a population of 23,902. It lies on the North Sea coast, some east-northeast of ...
in
Forfarshire Angus (; ) is one of the 32 local government council areas of Scotland, and a lieutenancy area. The council area borders Aberdeenshire, Dundee City and Perth and Kinross. Main industries include agriculture and fishing. Global pharmaceuticals ...
, active in the 1890s.


History

The Montrose second XI - was a 9–2 defeat, but it won its second game, 4–0, at Friockheim. The club secured Damley Park from mid-1892, enabling the club to join the Scottish Football Association, and from the 1892–93 season it started to enter both the Scottish Cup preliminary rounds and the Forfarshire Cup. With the much bigger and more established Arbroath F.C. on the club's doorstep, it found the going hard, losing every one of its Scottish ties, and it did not win in the Forfarshire Cup until 1894–95; the club was drawn against the new Dundee Hibernian, and sold home advantage for a guarantee of £4, but, after the Wanderers won 4–3, not only did it only receive £1 (said to be the whole of the gate money), but the Forfarshire FA ordered a replay as the match had stopped six minutes early. The Wanderers put the position right with a 7–1 win in the replay at home. The club lost 4–2 in the second round at the amateurs of Lochee United, a protest on various matters including the state of the pitch, the ball being lost for four minutes after it was kicked over a fence, and the game finishing in darkness; the Forfarshire FA dismissed it as "frivolous". That season was at least the club's most successful on the pitch to that date, with 13 wins, 5 draws, and 12 defeats, but the club was in a financially perilous state, In 1895–96, the club earned its most prominent win, by beating
Forfar Athletic Forfar Athletic Football Club are a Scottish semi-professional football club from the town of Forfar, Angus. They are members of the Scottish Professional Football League and currently play in . They play their home games at Station Park, in t ...
3–2 in the Forfarshire Cup, the winner being headed home by Smart after Phimister lifted the ball over a scrimmage. The Loons were top of the Northern League at the time, and would go on to win the title; the result was seen as sweet revenge, as the Wanderers had not been considered good enough for a place in the competition at the start of the season. In the second round it seemingly had beaten Montrose - its conquerors in the new
Scottish Qualifying Cup The Scottish Qualifying Cup was a football competition played in Scotland between 1895 and 2007. During that time, apart from a brief spell in the 1950s, it was the only way for non-league teams to qualify for the Scottish Cup. The Qualifying Cu ...
- on a "wretched" Gayfield, but it was replayed after a protest about the pitch and "molesting" by spectators, and the Gable Endies won the second go, this time at Damley Park, 2–1. A Wanderers protest that the winning goal came 3 minutes after time, and Murray in goal could not stop it because he had been incapacitated by a foul, was dismissed. Without a league to play in, and now out of all of the competitions, the Wanderers had the problem of surviving the second half of the season on friendlies while rival clubs were receiving a regular income from the Northern League. The difficulties of keeping the team together in such circumstances were made evident by a 10–0 defeat to Forfar Athletic in February 1896. The finances were also laid bare by a Montrose protest in February that the Wanderers had not paid Montrose its gate money share from the Forfarshire ties in November. The club's 1896–97 season was disastrous. Although it had its best result in the
Scottish Qualifying Cup The Scottish Qualifying Cup was a football competition played in Scotland between 1895 and 2007. During that time, apart from a brief spell in the 1950s, it was the only way for non-league teams to qualify for the Scottish Cup. The Qualifying Cu ...
- a 1–0 defeat to Lochee United, in front of a poor crowd - the club suffered successive defeats to Montrose (in the Forfarshire Cup) and Victoria United by 10–1 and 9–1. In 1897 the left the Forfar Association and only entered the Qualifying Cup; in the first round it sold its home advantage to
Forfar Athletic Forfar Athletic Football Club are a Scottish semi-professional football club from the town of Forfar, Angus. They are members of the Scottish Professional Football League and currently play in . They play their home games at Station Park, in t ...
- and on the day of the match sent two telegrams to Forfar, one saying the players had missed the train, the second that there were not enough players. The Wanderers were ordered to pay 24s in compensation. The club had one last attempt at revival, but its application in October for re-admission to the Forfarshire was refused, and no more is heard of the club.


Colours

The club wore red, blue, and chocolate hoops originally. By 1894 the club had changed to maroon and white striped jerseys.


Ground

The club's home pitch was Damley Park, the home of Strathmore the previous decade. In 1894 it moved to Lochlands Park, a cricket ground later used by Arbroath Amateurs, but secured Damley Park once more in August 1895.


Notable players

* Alex Penny, left-back with a number of clubs, including Newcastle East End and Arbroath, played a season for the Wanderers


External links


Scottish Cup seasons
with links to Qualifying Cup results


References

{{Defunct Scottish football clubs, state=collapsed Defunct football clubs in Scotland Association football clubs established in 1891 1891 establishments in Scotland Association football clubs disestablished in 1897 1897 disestablishments in Scotland Football clubs in Angus, Scotland Arbroath